Create an A10 Thunder ADC machine
Table of Contents
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- Activate Next-Generation Trust Security
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- Configure AWS connection
- Configure Azure Key Vault connection
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- Workload Identity Federation authentication
- Workload Identity Federation - Azure Identity Provider authentication
- Next-Gen Trust Security Generated Key authentication
- User permissions
- Workload Identity Federation authentication
- Next-Gen Trust Security Generated Key authentication
- User permissions
- Supported OIDC claims
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- Create an F5 BIG-IP LTM machine
- Create a Microsoft Azure Private Key Vault machine
- Create a Microsoft IIS machine
- Create a Microsoft Windows (PowerShell) machine
- Create a Microsoft SQL Server machine
- Create a Common KeyStore machine
- Create a Citrix ADC machine
- Create an Imperva WAF machine
- Create a VMware NSX Advanced Load Balancer (AVI) machine
- Create an A10 Thunder ADC machine
- Create a Cloudflare machine
- Create Kemp Virtual LoadMaster machine
- Create a Palo Alto Panorama machine
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- Provision to an F5 BIG-IP LTM
- Provision to a Microsoft Azure Private Key Vault
- Provision to Microsoft IIS
- Provision to Microsoft Windows (PowerShell)
- Provision to Microsoft SQL Server
- Provision to a Common KeyStore
- Provision to a Citrix ADC
- Provision to an Imperva WAF
- Provision to VMware NSX Advanced Load Balancer (AVI)
- Provision to an A10 Thunder ADC
- Provision to Cloudflare
- Provision to a Kemp Virtual LoadMaster
- Provision to Palo Alto Panorama
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- 47-Day Validity Readiness TLS Certificates dashboard
- About the Certificate Inventory
- Managing certificate lifecycle settings
- Reissuing certificates in Next-Gen Trust Security
- Downloading certificates, certificate chains, and keystores
- Retiring, recovering, and deleting certificates
- Finding certificates in the certificate inventory
- Importing certificates from a CA using EJBCA
- Notification Center overview
- Domain-based validation for external emails
- Managing user accounts
- Troubleshooting
Create an A10 Thunder ADC machine
Creating a machine enables Next-Gen Trust Security to connect directly to an A10 Thunder ADC so certificates can be provisioned to its keystores. After creating the machine, you can provision certificates to it.
Before you begin
- The hostname or IP address of the A10 Thunder ADC.
- The port number, if the ADC uses a port other than 443.
- Administrator credentials for the A10 Thunder ADC.
- (Optional) Shared credentials stored in a supported credential provider.
- Supported A10 Thunder ADC version: 5.2.0, build 155.
- In A10 Thunder ADC Address/Hostname, enter the hostname or IP address of the A10 Thunder ADC.
- If the A10 Thunder ADC uses a port other than 443, enter the port number in Port.
- (Optional) From Credential Type, select one of the following:
- Enter Credentials to provide credentials manually.
- Select Credentials to use shared credentials from a configured credential provider.
Note: The available credential options depend on your environment configuration. - If you selected Enter Credentials, enter the administrator Username and Password.
- If you selected Select Credentials, choose the appropriate credential from the Credential list.
- Click Test Access to verify connectivity.
- Click Create. The Create button is enabled only after the connection test succeeds.
What's next?
- Provision certificates to the machine. See Provision certificates to machines.
- Discover certificates already deployed on the machine to enable tracking and inventory. See Discover certificates on machines.